Counties fending off a storm of election-related lawsuits
Some county officials in South Dakota are still dealing with a flurry of election-related litigation that began last spring, despite several losses by plaintiffs claiming violations of election laws and after a judge labeled one lawsuits claims not fully developed and illogical.
At least a dozen county auditors have received petitions from local residents this year seeking to ban election technology such as electronic tabulators, and also seeking to require hand-counting in future elections. Three counties Gregory, Haakon and Tripp accepted petitions this summer and put them on the June primary ballot, where voters rejected all three measures.
The petitioners in South Dakota include people who believe former President Donald Trumps false claims thrown out by dozens of courts that President Joe Bidens 2020 victory over Trump was fraudulent (in South Dakota, Trump won with 62% of the vote in 2020). The South Dakota lawsuits are playing out amid a broader atmosphere of harassment against county officials, which recently took the form of activists accusing Minnehaha County commissioners of treason for upholding laws that allow people such as full-time traveling RVers to register and vote in South Dakota.
Lawrence County has been an epicenter for lawsuits in South Dakota, although most have been dismissed. The lawsuits began after the county commission rejected petitions seeking to ban various forms of election technology and require hand-counting. The commission cited reasons for the rejection including state and federal laws that require electronic voting systems for people with disabilities.
https://southdakotasearchlight.com/2024/10/18/counties-fending-off-a-storm-of-election-related-lawsuits/